Coulomb

Coulomb is an SI unit of electricity equal to the amount of electricity carried by a current of 1 Ampere for 1 second.

Coulomb was named after the French physicist Charles Coulomb, who was the first to establish a quantitative relationship between charges and the distance between them.

One coulomb is the amount of electricity that passes through the cross-section of a conductor in 1 second at a current of 1 ampere.

1 C = 1 A * 1 s

The coulomb is a derived SI unit and is defined in terms of the base units ampere and second.

The pendant is widely used to measure electrical charges, the amount of electricity, and in other electrical calculations.



Coulomb is an SI unit of electricity equal to the amount of electricity transmitted in 1 second at a current of 1 Ampere.

The pendant was introduced in 1793 by the French scientist Charles Coulomb, after whom it received its name.

1 coulomb is the amount of electricity that passes through the cross-section of a conductor in 1 second at a current of 1 ampere.

The coulomb is a derived SI unit and is defined in terms of the base units second and ampere:

1 C = 1 A * 1 s

The coulomb is used to measure the charge of an electron (approximately equal to 1.602⋅10^−19 C) and other elementary particles.

In electrical engineering, a coulomb is used to calculate the amount of electricity carried by an electric current.

Thus, the coulomb is the fundamental SI unit of measurement of electric charge. Its introduction made it possible to establish a quantitative relationship between current strength, time and transferred charge.